Preeclampsia (PE) affects from 2 to 8% of pregnant women. Recent studies show that prevention is the best strategy to improve perinatal outcomes. Therefore, the development of new strategies for preeclampsia screening becomes essential in order to determine the individual risk for each patient, and thus, to identify those who would be candidates for receiving prophylactic treatment with low-dose aspirin from the first trimester of pregnancy. The aim of our study is to determine prospectively, during clinical practice, the predictive and preventive capacity of a model of preeclampsia sequential screening in the first trimester of pregnancy. This is a prospective, multicentre, cohort study, with the collaboration of Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau (Barcelona), Hospital Universitario de Cruces (Bilbao), Hospital Son Llàtzer (Mallorca) and Hospital Clínico Universitario Lozano Blesa (Zaragoza). Women with a singleton pregnancy attending to the 12-week ultrasound scan at one of the maternity hospitals participating in the study between March 1st 2021 and 30th October 2021 will be recruited. Patients who accept to participate in the study will be classified into three risk groups (low-risk, moderate-risk and high risk) based on medical history, Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP), Pregnancy-Associated Plasma Protein A (PAPP-A) and Uterine Artery Pulsatility Index (UTPI). Placental Growth Factor (PlGF) will only be determined in those patients classified as intermediate risk after this first step and then reclassified in high and low-risk patients depending on its values. The number of first-trimester scans performed by these hospitals is approximately 8200 patients annually. Due to PE prevalence in our environment is around 3% of the total population, a total of 246 cases of PE are to be expected. Therefore, based on similar previous experiences, we could assume that 80% of the patients will accept to participate in the study, meaning a total sample of 6560 pregnant women.
All the data required to carry out this study, including those derived from sonographies and blood tests, will be collected during the normal pregnancy control, without further appointments. A blood test will be requested in all pregnant women in the first appointment of pregnancy control between 9 and 13 weeks, to determine risk of chromosomal disorders according to the national protocol and it will be used this same sample to analyze angiogenic factors without requiring new blood extractions. In the first-trimester scan, the mean uterine arteries pulsatility index will be determined, as well as mean arterial pressure. In this visit, the patient will be asked about her medical history. We will offer the patients the inclusion to our study in that moment; those who agree to participate in the study will sign the informed consent. In the participants, the initial risk of PE will be calculated using maternal medical history, MAP, UTPI and PAPP-A (already used in aneuploidies screening), using the software validated to each laboratory. Patients will be classified into 3 groups: * Low risk of PE (\<1/500) * Intermediate risk of PE (between 1/50 and 1/500) * High risk of PE (\>1/50) In those patients classified as intermediate and high-risk, PlGF and s-Flt-1 will be determined from the blood samples kept in biobanks of each hospital according to the current legislation. SFlt-1 results will be analyzed at the end of the study in order to decrease the cost because there will not be used to make clinical decisions. PlGF in high-risk patients will not be considered either to reclassify those patients. In both cases, the diagnostic efficiency will be analyzed at the end of the study. Patients in the intermediate-risk group (1/50-1/500) will be reclassified after adding PlGF levels in the predictive algorithm in 2 groups: Low risk of PE (\<1/160) and High risk of PE (\>1/160). To the patients classified as high risk at any of the steps, will be offered prophylactic treatment with AcetylSalicylic acid (ASA) (150mg/24h) until 36 weeks of pregnancy, if there is not a contraindication. All data from eligible patients will be analyzed. A bivariant statistical analysis will be performed in order to assess the relationship between dependent variables (diagnose of PE and/or IUGR) and the other variables included in this study
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
6,560
All pregnant women that present to the 12-week scan in the Obstetrics Unit
Diagnosis of preeclampsia
Diagnosis of preeclampsia during pregnancy following the definition of the International Society for the Study of Hypertension in Pregnancy, (ISSHP)
Time frame: 30 weeks
Early-onset Preeclampsia
Early-onset Preeclampsia: diagnosos before 34 weeks of pregnancy
Time frame: 30 weeks
Severe preeclampsia
Severe preeclampsia (ISSHP)
Time frame: 30 weeks
Pregnancy-induced hypertension
Pregnancy-induced hypertension
Time frame: 30 weeks
SGA
Small for gestational age: birth weight below the 10th percentile
Time frame: 30 weeks
IUGR
Intrauterine Growth Restriction
Time frame: 30 weeks
Perinatal mortality
Perinatal mortality (\>22 weeks of pregnancy - \< 28 days postpartum)
Time frame: 30 weeks
Neonatal acidosis
Neonatal acidosis (arterial pH \<7.10 + base excess \>12mEq/L)
Time frame: 30 weeks
Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
Days of admission in neonatal Intensive Care Unit
Time frame: 16 weeks
Neonatal morbidity
Significant neonatal morbidity: convulsions, intraventricular haemorrhage \> III grade, periventricular leukomalacia, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, abnormal electroencephalogram, necrotizing enterocolitis, acute renal failure (serum creatinine \>1.5mg/dL) or heart failure (requiring inotropic agents).
Time frame: 16 weeks
Gestational age at birth
Gestational age at birth
Time frame: 30 weeks
Type of delivery
Type of delivery (vaginal, spontaneous or instrumental, cesarean section)
Time frame: 30 weeks
Cost of the analysis of angiogenic and antiangiogenic factors
The economic cost of the analysis of angiogenic and antiangiogenic factors in euros (PlGF and sFlt-1).
Time frame: 18 months
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